Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 1 Mar 1923, p. 4

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nor PL W. F URS Men s an4 Phone By the Sliced . CH1 CHOIC HIGHEST Hmn THURSE 11.` L -ynuvv 7 *\./ucuxva. I/awn: uuuac, opavv-UU down. . $1600--'--Brick house, barn, large lot. $1450 ---Modern cottage, light, wa- 4-nyu Qnnn ll Ann... BR! Meal McCl:1 52 E Ph Iod ALL 4 5PE4 SE1 MA ANI `:4. v ":vJ.vu\;L11 uuubal gear; $400.00 down_ $2700~--Brick house, 1-....- 1 -1. Three properties featured a week. agohave been snapped `up. Watch` these'go. They are real values:---- $1200---Comfortable house, $200.00} I` n-Ilvn H. A. HENRY 5 2 THE REAL ESTATE MAN sou) AT 100 OFF OURWAGONS qnd at all stores l`3RYSON S SUN MAID ` RAISIN LOAF Ed. `Bryson s CONFECTIONERY Bare '- . Allandale. uuuy ulusl. recelve Its" sharevof vital force from the brain if you are to retain your health.- When a displacement` of a=v.erte- V `brae occurs, the Chiro- practor seeks the exact spot and an adjustment removes the interference. USE % ICE CREAM FOR DESSERT ` Dunlap. St. at Mulcaster LUNCH SERVED Phone 31w: bath, lights, I Sunshine`Sketches is the way Dlthe Collingwood Bulletin refers to 1TFred Grant s articles that have been 3 appearing in The Examiner. Not a .;bad way of .descri_bing them.` Mineworkers claim that six ofthe Heading anthracite coal companies .have increased their prots 363% sgsince 1912. From the way our coal :`-bills have clirqbed these years, We ican quite believe it. mu... vv unu uu 1 grab: . Community public he is not a cut-throat enterprise V where men gdaily sally forth to get the neck of ia competitor. It must be, and will be, if all come in with the spirit of `the good sport, _a contest to do one s Lbest. not for self alone, but for all. In the success of your town you will *,get your share of sugcess, and it will ;become more than you ever gathe- fore. This is what is meant by com- noun-ii-xr fnnm urn:-`Ir T4 um- ..I.....--.. .. A Meaford curlers held a church par- `ade last Sundav. Sweeping asser- ,tions by the minister might be ex- pected under the circumstances. ' .uu.. LIAID In vvnay lb xucaul. uy com-' munity team work. It was always a `living principle in building the strong !community. V The need was to put it jinto practise. It is never too late to ;get on.the team in your town. I I .,,...... o What is an ideal? -A.big uplift-!: ing thought for your town. for your; home, for yourown conduct, .for} your country. Take these out` of thei daily affairs"of men "and what have; you left? V A lot of schemers` and] leaners, parading as honorable gen-| tlemen, but loaded with the ethics of I the burglar. "No sacrice of their: ,.time for the common good: no pat- riotism. no 1ove---the I selsh ques- -tion. `What do` I get? ur'I................-.s-- ...-'I.I:- - luvs. LU wan 215 J.UllUW5I" Honesty is the common heritage. `So is dishonesty. The world has more of the former, but it too often; ilacks expression. One is an asset; the other is a liability. If you have honesty you are a help to your com-l munitv. If you have money and fail to help a public uplift. your drag `weighs more. ` It costs the town more` to _carry you, because your money. plus the public spirit could do more good. The poor` man with public . spirit and a big idea is the better ` citizen because an idealbegets ideals. Ideals are worth more to the com- t munity than money without public- spirit. ` llT1T`l.-.L 3,, n I In A u - ---1 In nu nus Caldwell. , -, __._._ .....o w A-I-`I-'Il\ll\lA'lI-I A business man of Oshkosh, Wis.,; wrote an editorial for his local pa-f per. It was as follows:---- L . [ (`TJ....__A.__ 3,, J1 wanna \4(`BCu `. After the McCubbin report has?` been dealt with by the Countv_ Coun- ,1 oil. it is very imnrobable that any-;'` thing` further wil1'be heard "of a" general _scheme `to drain the 1ow,1 lauds along the Nottawasaga. I E . ---- - 2 A BUSINESS MAN'S EDITORIAL \wu.n us ponucan consequences) I would he so great that` enabling leg-T islation would bevery difficult to se-: cure even if the benets were more; inearly commensurate with the ex-} V nenditure than they appear to be inf this case. i was ' made. . A perusal` of Engineer McCubbin s 5report and an examination of the plans and schedules attached thereto show the scheme to'be vastly more a ------ I l .Members of Orillia town council` :contemplate taking advantage of the legislation passed by the Legislature] Jlast year, permitting town councils. to vote themselves pay atthe rate of Iextensive than most people anticipate`; $5 each for. attending meetings of ged. While the area it was aimed to ilpenefit directly is onlvwsome 18.000 - [to 20,000 acres. the whole watershed area that would have to be consider- lled is 680_000 acres. and if the assess- according to the provisions of the Municipal Drainage Act, it would extend over seventeen townships and l`several towns and villages. To make -{the depth of channel required would Hnecessitatn gnmn Fnnw maim... ....1.:.. p L I ment for the work were" carried out council andlcommittees. Should the] zcouncillors vote themselves this re-! Qmuneration, it will cost the towni `about $2000 a year. _ . I J. Harry Flynn has been sentenced} to two years `imprisonment and ten lashes and will be deported on the `completion of his term. The nature : of the offence is not disclosed, but ` the sentence shows that it must have I`! 1,, I\nnv\ n ...-...:...-... -.._ m1.:_ 3, _,..uu. *1 In some drainage works that have! ' been undertaken in Ontario. the cost ' is assessed directl,v'ag'ainst the own-_! iers of low lands who-are. willing to i pay because of the benets which]! would accrue.- It is most unlikelvf` `that the owners of the 18.000 acres;1 of such lands along the Nottawasaga V would be willing to pay $860.000 to; ghave drainage effected. On the other; `hand, if it was proposed to carry. out `i ithe scheme on a watershed basis, en- 3` abline: legislation would have to be`? passed to bring` the work under thel Municipal Drainage Act. With an` lundertaking of . this maenitudelt .stretchin,c: over many municipalities. - I iandv affecting thousands of nroperty-`C owners,` the possibilities of troublei` (with its political` consequences) V urnnltl in an ._.......L .LL-A.- __-,1 ` n |....., .......... VI. uuzuucx rcquzreu woulu necessitate some four million cubic yards of excavation and the estim-I ated cost of the whole work is $860,-g iooo. T _ ! Among the grants to harbors and wharves'inc1uded in the main estim- a_tesA of the Dominion was $2500 for `Big Bay Point. -__.v- - an -`qunru.a|\Vl a - When the big` sleet storms of last - winter struck the lines of the Bell 1 Telephone Company in Western and E Central Ontario, President L. B. Mc- tl Farlane points out in his annual re- port. they did damage that cost the huge total of $1,199;000 to repair. `That the Company had a reserve - which enabled it to take care of this - tremendous setback without swallow- ~ ing up a great partof the year's net revenues was wholly fortunate-for- ' tunate for present subscribers whose ` ` complete service was ouickly restor- ed. - for shareholders the return ofl; whose investment was safeguarded and `for prospective subscribers. the 1 capital to build whose lines was still forthcoming` because of the unim- [paired credit of thecompany. f I V ' V . - i A Real Windfall Ontario Reformer: One wonders how Gordon Waldron, the Toronto lawyer. managed to get along in life before the Drury Government came into power. In the three years in which they have held office. they have given him over $11,000 in fees. It must have seemed like a real wind- lfall to this lawyer. . MA year-old baby died at Wacb, Tex fl-"om the effects of a grain of corn drawn into the lungs. _ _ A _ Smoking inwbed caused I` re In his room at an Augusta, Ga., hotel which killed Johg tV..l.I..u\" I Cost of Elections Carleton Place Herald: 'I`he,gen- ,eral Federal elections of 1921, when {the King Government was returned gto power, cost the Dominion of Can- iada a total of $1.739.988_92. accord- !in_2' to the Auditor-General s report ifor the scal }year ended Mar. 31. 1922. The forfeitures of election de- posits totalled $39,400. I ,i No More V Experimenting [ _ Orillia Packet: Premier Drury has {expressed his personal sympathy with |a proposal to have proportional re- presentation made optional in muni- cipal elections. The present Legis- .lature has done a great deal to in- crease the expense. and reduce the "efficiency. of municipal government -in Ontario. There should be no more experimenting, at the expense of the taxpayers. T 0! -~------------ rf Though there . may be some justi- tlcation for recent attacks made up-I _aon the Ontario Compensation Board. 3 5there should be some way of correct- ggimr abuses without resorting to the , `courts, as is suggested by some mem- 3 bers of the Legislature. One of the _Fprime objects in the establishment _Iof the Board was to have claims for ,;compensation dealt with in such a , way as to give the injured workman for his dependents full benet of the .,'sum to which they might "be entitled ,~and not have it frittered away by _i'litigation. If the Board has been i ,'arbitrar_v, it should be checked up sharply. Industry in Ontario is con- 1 tributing heavily to provide relief ,!for injured workmen `and every.l _iclaimant has a right to expect antliw gdemand courteous treatment and them .Efullest consideration from the Board "1 [appointed to administer this fund. I ,%&&&%maam&%m%&3 AMONG EXCHANGES w$mm&&%ama&$%m&a nu ouuucuyc auuvva yuan ll: IHLISL ll21V' been a serious one. This is the same `Flynn who carried on a campaign of ivillication against menibers of the` lgovernment and .other nublic men Ewho would not accede to his `demands. When he spoke in Barrie. _seeking to establish an organization `in opnosition to the G.W.V.A., he re- ]ceived a` very cold reception. local gveterans having pretty well sized ;him 'up( as .an unprincipled agitator with a dangerous gift of gab. I sentenced; fcompletion nature! 1 of the LI... ...-...4......... ..L-__-_ .u-,L 3: THE VALUE oi` A RESERVE ! . At a recent meeting of Newmarketl Itown council a motion to make a [straight grant of $500 to the York! . County Hospital was laid over owing` Ito the absence of several members; `Several councillors. in supporting` zthe motion, laid very. strong emphasis upon the value of a `hospital to the community. ' ' 0rillia s bandmaster, appealing to `the business men on behalf of the band, concludes; You produce the _money, I'll produc the brains." A! fellow like tliat who can deliver` br-ains on order should be pretty use-l ful around 'Orillia. , T 1 Gasoline has advanced two cents} a gallon. Looking out upon the snow ` ,banks that still decorate the land- scape, local motorists will not worry much over the increase for a_while. yet. H. A, HENRY, `ma Bayuzu-: EXAMINER 3 George Davis. of Sout.h_Bend. Ind., was fined $500 and sent to jail for six months for stealing nine cents from a news stand. ' Photographed htiman voice can be pro jected by` radio with such precision that recorded voice cannot be distinguished from spoken. ` vvanu l.ulU_. suoweu up to bettetharlvantage than at. any time this year. Their passing _and skating was good -and their shooting |was a little above par, with the result that Ivar Anderson, in the Duluth nets, was re- quired to be on his good behavior at all ' times." l -...-...u_, nullvo Bogardis was ruled off for two minutes 1 for a hard `body checks near the boards and this gave the visitors just the opening need- ed. In less than fifteen seconds, Olson slammed in two goals, which gave Duluth a" commanding lead, with the advantage of _ having an extra man in the play. This - the visitors * defeat. incident occurred at a most inopportune time and when Milwaukee was playing off their feet. It looked as though the locals would jumpinto the lead at any moment. and then came Bogardis penalty, which turned the game from one of what looked like sure victory into one of It was also regrettable` because Bogardis was playing such a brilliant game, perhaps the best of the entire year. It was he who scored both Milwaukee's goals. one of which was made unassisted. There; turn of Captain Joe Sills to the game made a difference in Milwaukee's defence antli appeared to give Dinty Moore greater con- ' The latter is again playing in his old style manner and workedlike a demon in the game Thunsday night. Bogardis. Boyd and Smith, forming Milwaukee s for- ward line, showed to betteradvantage 4"\nI\ rs` ....-. LL..- Ll` umur:-u iucu awuu. ugure. nogarqls play-` .ed a brilliant game but was ruled off for body-checking and while he was on the fence Duluth scored two. `giving them the victory 3 to 2. The following extracts from the report will be of interest to Bar- rie hockey fans:- un .- - - BRILLIANT HOCKEY BY BOGARDIS PLAYING FOR MILWAUKEE TEAM The Milwaukee Sentinel of Feb. 16 re- ports a great hockey battle between Du- luth and the home team on which "`Babe" Bogardis and Dinty Moore, graduates of Ban-ie's iced arena. figure. Bogardis play- .ed a hrilliant vamp Jmf urns: u-nlm'.-.66` tn.` _--- -.v-n naanunv u 4 r Samuel de Champlain was one of the great Frenchmen France gave to Canada. For thirty years this in- y- trepid traveller of the seventeenth - century explored the shores and riv- ers and inland lakes of the then un- discovered Dominion, during F three successive voyages. `His rst trip ~ across the Atlantic was made under 3 the sanction of Henry of Navarre t and in theeservice of God and his r King. He anchored oii the Isle of` 1 Orleans during the rst voyage at l 1 about the time the Mayower vac 1 1 v '3 .. 2, landing its historic passengers on; l Plymouth Rock. On his ,way up the 7 Richelieu, he fought his rst battle x with the Iroquois. which made them ) the foes of the French for a century` - and a half thereafter. Not only was! ." Champlain the founder of Quebec,` ' . but when he selected the Isle of Mon- I trcal asthe site of an inland fort and eltrading` post`he also laid the founda-I lltions of the Montreal-to-he. The Champlain Monument on the Duffer- in Terrace represents him as holding his commission from the French King`. and facing the great river on which: he had often gazed. Kingsford has given Champlain an epitaph that lmight well be envied by any public I l man: His memory is entirely un- stained by the slightest abuse of his trust. The outstanding events in his life were his youth spentin the army of Henry IV; his voyages to New France in 1603 and 1608: his appointment as Lieutenant of Can- ada in 1612, as Governor of Canada ---the rst--in 1632, and his death on Christmas Eve of 1635 at the age of sixty-eight. ' ' Brief Biographical Sketches of Some e of the Dominion ; Big Men Who Have Passed Away. I ___- . ..-- -a\I`Jl\l'IhI7l"\ Who will have the temerlityto pen I a biographical sketch of Henri Bour- l "assa--one that will `do him justice . . . ., . 23$5?$..'i3'"sm"io";'is3?;t.fif1 ic in these piping days of compara- tive peace, but once he daily claimed a large front-page space in the press l with other space, of another kind on -the editorial page. This young man, ' for he is still only a trie `past the ifty-mile-post, was evidently destin- -ed temperamentally and otherwise, tlfor a moulder. of public opinion ulthrough the press and the rostrums :!of debate in legislature and parlia- ;`_ment; as` a moulderpwho mapped out L` $32 3332 333 `"53 .~ Zii';`; 3.1`? ilquences. The Frgench-Cklianadian in a all _his relations- -nationally and im-,' perially--+has ever been his dommantl theme,. often expressing opinions I that rag: fountgr tho curiglnt lthoughgj u in o wgsltormy apetT:le Paprilneau eonce( was g min Quebec or William Lyon Macken-i zie in `Ontario; A Bourassa election. was always a livelv one, and his par-g '1 ticipation in parliamentary debates. las an avowed Nationalist. was a pre- ` | H: f "b1bttl. H MEL 2;d n3Z3I3e$3iJecgZ 0? mi con`? gliirlence of his fellow citizens in- oft- Iv-epeated elections, including` the mayoralty of his town. Mr. Bourassa has been relatively quiet for a few 'years. but the part he has alreadya `played makes him an outstanding: figure in French Canada. l I - ' u vu IJUL u. u: y Iuuucl. ll _ IIUIIIC UUII 1 u _ 9 'al. $3500~-Wide range to choose from. $3760----One of best houses in town. HENRI BOURASSA CHAMPLAIN Aululllls AVLHWHUKCC S E0!`- this vear, 'l"lmi.- nu..."-. "Dry Body Hardvsfood_ am} Tamarack a_nd Hard anol Softwood Slabs ~ and `Cedar Kmdlmg In any quantlty or any length desired V__ _ ._...-.- --...... ..... uuu cuuucuuy 68 771'r Bums 1`gAN ASH Delivered in any quantity . . . . . . . . . . per ton j ._-_ .. -- --- vnvw-avast UUIIIIIU This fuel is_ growing in favor with_ our custon_1ers and -recommend It as bemg both economlcal and emlnently sa 11.1`: wuuuuunua --4 ._- 4 _,, ANT!!BA!TE novuars Business Blocks for sale and rent. Farms and Market Gardens. Houses every size and price. BED STORE Phone 65W, Evenings 885 Ollon Hardware Co. _,_j _. :_: -can jQ-CI Wear-Ever(Stewpan (1-qt. wine measure), only ` ct-w winhld Domestic Eg:g, West Vir ginia Lump and Coke HAS JUST ARRIVED in excellex;t gmdition. nn~_.....-.... ._ _._ L- ,,_______-v-ua-1 \IA1IJ Buckwheat, Pea, Nut, Stove and Egg sizes _.v w- ---wn-no -wvo-av.-A59 See thes s;)'eTciV:;ls,`-;1-is 1)layed in our window Come to our Store TODAY and get your share of these bargains - 1.1---- A Vauvv""\JUU\l uvuac, uugc gurucu and barn. ' `.\ $2600--~Brick house, every conven- lence. $3L`00--Strictl_v 111odern.holne, cen- vol _AN__O:l'HER we SPECIAL! ANTHKACIIE com. .BIT9MIN9Us7oAL WOOD A SHIPMENT OF 43. THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1923 lstomers we highly eminently satisfactory. mu 7- u vv J-vA.a\l\ uuuav, uuuu, ll5ulu,! large lot. v$1500---Nice cottag, barn, drchard`. $2200--Briclvhouse, ne lot. _ $2300---Good house, large garden; on! Inn-n Elizabeth St. $1450 `Phone 384 -,,.. Healthiest pin -best \'e:1Lil:l1i cooking. ("mu A M311 Assorted Wamer s COLORE 78x90 W A full fruited, generously lled loaf with a real raisin avor`. Every Bite a Delight

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